kareina: (me)
When I left off on posting mom had just died and my sisters and I (and Beth's dog, Max) went to go walk around Greenlake together. It was a good walk, with lots of good conversation, and just what we needed just then. That was Tuesday, the 4th of December (which I only know because I just looked it up, not because I am able to remember dates; I am not).

The next day (Wednesday) we sisters and our Aunt Barbara (mom's oldest, and now only surviving, sibling) went out to get pedicures. I have never had a pedicure in my life, and never wanted one, either. But when my sister explained that one sits in a massage chair while someone plays with your feet I decided that I was in. (I live for foot rubs! (among other things).) When we arrived we were instructed to choose a colour, and, of course, I picked a darkish blue. I considered going even darker, but Amber warned me that in her experience colours often come out darker than they look in the bottle, and I didn't want nails that look like they have been hit with a hammer, so I settles for only darkish. Of course, it turns out that this particular bottle dries a bit lighter, and when dry the blue has almost faintly greenish overtones, so it isn't nearly as pretty as it was in the bottle.

They didn't tell me till after we were done that if I had said something after seeing the colour on toe number one I could have asked them to take it off and do another colour, but that didn't occur to me, and I didn't want to complain when we are supposed to be bonding. I asked if snow flakes were an option, and they said yes. Amber suggested they might have decals. I don't know if they did or not, because the lady just took a bottle of white nail polish and drew snowflakes on my two big toes free hand. Unfortunately, she comes from a warm country (the Philippians I would guess) and now lives in Seattle, and somehow never got the memo that snowflakes have six-fold symmetry, so she drew them with eight arms, which meant that they are so crowded together it was hard for her to squeeze in the side branches and fluffy bits, but they look ok, and it is easy to tell that they are meant to be snowflakes. She did add a coating of glitter over the top of the flakes. While we were there Amber told me that she has some travel pads of nail polish remover that she would send home with me so I could clean the polish later, there being no point in buying a bottle of nail polish I will never need again. However, we forgot about that before she flew back to San Francisco. However, I kind of like the idea of just letting the paint grow out, and seeing how long it takes before the evidence is gone. It is only a little embarrassing to be seen with painted toe nails (and then I am more embarrassed if it is seen by strangers, who will be more likely to assume that painted nails are normal for me).

Later that day my friend Josie came to visit, along with her partner Lightfoot. He was hungry, so she and I accompanied him to a restaurant, where he had some sushi, and she and I just drank some miso soup as we didn't fel for tea with caffeine. Afterwards we went back to Beth's house, where I taught them a bit of acroyoga in the living room (and my aunt Barbara was very impressed to see me balancing on their upraised feet, etc. That was the evening my brother in law, Beto, had made a flann for dinner (which I hadn't eaten, as it was too late in the evening. However, there was a bit left the next day, and I had it for second breakfast, and liked it so much he promised me one for my birthday.

Thursday was a run errands and hang out with sisters and my younger niece, Lucia (11 years old, who had been given permission to miss a couple of days of school because she was so sad to have lost her beloved grandmother; her big sister, Anahi, at 14 preferred to distract herself with being busy, and went to school) day, including a walk in the dog park (where Lucia and I climbed the big tree on the shore of the lake), since it was the last full day we would all be together. Friday, we all went out to lunch together, and then Kirsty and Amber went back to the house to get their luggage and headed off to the airport, Kirsty to return to Melbourne, and Amber to San Francisco. I, on the other hand, met up with my dear friend and adopted cousin Jen and her husband Shelby for tea and delightful conversation at a tea shop, and a bit later my SCA sister Carrie arrived and took me out to her place in Hobart (we had no idea there was a Hobart in the Seattle area!) for dinner and to see the house and meet her dogs (which are tall, slender creatures with bit pointy ears that look more like deer than dogs). Then she brought be back to Beth's place in the U district. We did try stopping by Mat and Kay's place on the way home to say hi, but they weren't in.

On Saturday two more of my beloved friends came to visit. Shannon, whom I met when I lived in Eugene, and Paul, with whom I lived when I was in Ashland drove up to see me and take me out for an early birthday lunch/dinner. They arrived around 13:00 and we hung out and chatted for a bit, and then took a half a hour walk to a Thai restaurant (we had asked Beth for recommendations, but the Thai place she used to enjoy doesn't exist anymore, so she checked reviews on line, and that one was well recommended), which had very yummy food, with the veg perfectly steamed so that the broccoli wasn't overcooked. Then we walked back to the house, hung out for a bit, I showed them the movie The Arranged Marriage that my sister Amber made years ago (a documentary about our parents and how their daughters fixed them up with an arranged marriage) then Shannon got her massage table out of the car and gave me a massage. By then we were tired, so we went to sleep. Since Paul currently has both arms in a cast after having had a driver suddenly pull out in front of him when he was driving a motor scooter, he choose to sleep on the couch, where he wouldn't be hitting anyone with the casts during the night, so Shannon and I took the giant air mattress.

Sunday I woke up earlier than the others and did my yoga and had first breakfast, then when they got up I made some baking powder biscuits to share with them for my second breakfast. Then my SCA sister Clover and her husband Chris arrived, and we four went out to the same Indian restaurant that I had been to with Martin the day before mom died. The food was yummy, and the company delightful. After food we dropped Paul and Shannon back at the house so that they could return to Portland, and Clover and Chris went out to Woodinville for Tania and Mike's house concert with Felecia and William.

We arrived a good hour before the concert (even after stopping at a local distillery for C&C to buy some whisky), before the sun had set, so we got to see a glimpse of the the really pretty grounds before we went into the house (but it was raining, so we didn't do any exlporing). When we walked in the door the owner of the house, Alisaundre, was explaining to Tania that she recognised my name. Back in 2015, when I first ran Norrskensfesten I had asked on the SCA bardic list if anyone wanted to come to northern Sweden to teach a bardic class. Most people who replied said some variant of "oh, I wish!", but Alisaundre said "I could skype in". So she and her daughter did, and it was a fun class. She gave us a tour of the house, which is truly beautiful. They have a few rooms down stairs that they rent out as an Air BnB, and there is a little kitchenette there that the guests can use. They also have the gaming suite down there. The entry level floor is where the various living rooms and kitchen are, and there are bedrooms upstairs. I remember seeing her post photos of it to FB a year or so back when they were first purchasing it and planning on all of the things they would be able to do with it, including house concerts. During the tour she mentioned that the goal of having this amazing house and property was to make it a resource for all of their communities: Poly, Pagan, and SCA. After giving us the tour she introduced us to her husband, Leith, who hadn't joined in for that skype bardic class. However, he is also a bard, and, in fact, was the An Tir bardic champion the year Crian and I lived in Vancouver. I remember being introduced to him at Kingdom level event that year, though I don't remember what, if anything, we might have talked about during that brief meeting. I do remember his intense blue eyes and the fact that he was wearing the Bardic Champion's cloak.

Mike and Tania had told me that I would like Felecia and William, and they were correct. I chatted a little with them before the concert, and more during intermission and afterwards, and they are both delightful people I hope that our paths cross again. The concert itself was amazing, as I knew it would be. The four of them team up every winter to do a series of concerts, and it is so clear that they love what they do, and they harmonise so well together. I took the best seat in the house, the corner of the couch closest to the musicians, and sat down with my sewing project. Leith came and sat next to me, and a third person (Chris?) sat beyond him. During the first part of the concert, in between songs, I commented to Lieth that I have been in love with Tania since I was in high school, but when Felicia and William opened their mouths to sing I just lost my heart two more times.

The first bit of intermission Leith and I continued to sit on the couch and chat with one another, but then I got up to go ask to play Tania's dulcimer (we have the same kind) and visit with the musicians, and meet some of the other guests (it was a small crowd, and everyone seemed like interesting people I would enjoy knowing). When we sat back down Leith sat even closer to me than he had before, and asked to see what I was sewing. I showed him the viking coat in progress (just seam embroider left to sew, and I need to decide what to do in the way of clasps, but it was a good coat to wear during the trip). Then, after showing him the Ösenstitch (#b in that photo), though I do it backwards compared to that drawing) I am using on the seams I put down the sewing and he and I enjoyed the rest of the concert while holding hands and cuddling a little, which made an amazing concert even better.

After the concert there was time to visit more with the musicians, hosts, and guests for a while before they served dinner to those of us who were still there. They have one of those sous vide things, so there was a ham cooking the whole time the concert was happening, but it wasn't possible to smell it at all till they opened it. Even though many of my friends seem to be very happy with theirs, I hadn't really seen the point, since most of what I cook is something I can do quickly and keep busy with the whole time it is cooking so that being hungry while I wait for food doesn't bother me. However, for something like a house concert, where people want to focus on the music and not the smell of cooking food, it is perfect.

I, of course, wasn't hungry that late in the evening, but I happily sat and drank my water and visited with the others as they ate. Eventually Tania, Mike, Felicia and William had to go--they had a ferry to catch to get home. After they left Chris, Clover, Leith and I went out to the hot tub for a bit of bardic. I was kind of surprised no one else joined us (Alisaundre had a cold, so she couldn't join us), but just the four of us was nice too. Clover and Leith traded lots of songs, and I shared a few in Swedish. Leith has memorised quite a number of period French and other language songs. I would love to get him to Drachenwald to meet Kaarina! Then Chris and Clover had to head home to get some sleep before work the next day (they had an hour's drive), but I opted to stay. When we went back into the house everyone else had gone, or, in the case of the four or five others who live there, gone to their rooms, so we sat in one of the small living rooms and Leith played guitar and sang me some more songs, before showing me to the Peacock guest room and then retiring upstairs to his own room a little before 01:00. All of that music and good company after midnight made for a beautiful start to my birthday Monday.

I was in too good of a mood to sleep straight away, so I called David and we talked for a short while. Then I slept for almost three hours, and woke back up full of energy and joy, so I chatted with friends in other time zones on messenger for a bit, and went back to sleep and slept for another three hours, getting up at 08:00. I enjoyed breakfast with Leith and one of the housemates (whose name I didn't catch), and then I got a ride in with him to the microsoft campus where he works, arriving at about 10:00. My sister met me there and we ran some errands together, and then went back to the house where she made Beto's flann recipe for my birthday dinner:

Beto’s Flann

Ingredients:
3 eggs beaten
1 bar of cream cheese (8 oz, or 250 g)
1 can (12 fl oz or 354 ml) evaporated milk
1/2 can (full can is 14 oz or 397 g) or less of sweetened condensed milk
A bit of liquid vanilla.

Directions:
* Caramelise 1/2 cup sugar in a pan over medium heat
* Quickly pour melted sugar into the bottom of a loaf pan
* Cream cheese with 1 cup of warm water in the blender.
* Add the rest of ingredients and blend it all together.
* Set the pan in a larger pan containing water (not deep enough to get any water in the flann pan, of course.
* Bake (both pans together) at 350 F for one hour
* Let it cool for an hour before putting in the fridge
* Give it four or five hours in the fridge
* Invert onto a platter right before serving
* Garnish with fresh berries (we used raspberries!)

While that cooked and chilled we hung out together, I started some spaghetti sauce for dinner (containing tomato and kale with ground walnut, almond, sunflower seeds and she introduced me to her preferred cloud resource for project management and to-do lists (which I have since adopted for myself and downloaded the phone app).

Then she took the train to meet Anahi in the city center, where she attends school and accompany her from there to an audition, and I borrowed the car to pick up Lucia from school and get her to her Broadway Bound rehearsal (Beto was at work, so Beth was glad to have me there to help make the logistics work). Then I went home and enjoyed some spaghetti for my dinner early, and when everyone was home from work, auditions, and rehearsals they sat down to dinner and I jumped straight to desert. Good thing too--Lucia loves raspberries as much as I do, so it was good to get my share first, before she got to the Flann. Before they would let me eat Beth decorated it with candles (12 of them for my 5th 12th birthday), they sung to me, and I blew them out. I didn't even think of making a wish, and the first one that comes to mind as I type isn't possible, as we have this bad habit of living time in a linear manner.

After dinner, since I was flying out really early the next morning, I gave the girls Christmas presents. This is the first time I have ever given them something, since I live far away, am not a shopper, am too lazy to post stuff, and don't actually celebrate Christmas or give gifts to anyone. But it felt right to do so at this time. Beth told me that the girls love ear rings, and there had been much teasing back and forth between us for me being a geologist who loves pretty minerals, and them thinking rocks are boring and preferring organic stuff. Therefore we went looking for some nice ear rings with stones or minerals in them, so that I could give them something that would remind them of me and the banter. I knew that Anahi's favourite colour is yellow, since she had mentioned that when she found out that I don't really like yellow as a colour (but on that point there was no teasing, we both just accepted that the other has different taste--there is never any accounting for taste). So when I saw the bright yellow amber ear rings I couldn't resist buying them for her. We tried searching the store for ear rings that said "Lucia", but didn't spot any. The store clerk, undaunted, looked through the overflow stash, and found another pair of amber ear rings in a dark orangish red but in the same shape as the pair for Anahi. Lucia's favourite colour changes now and then, but she has loved that colour in the past, so I picked up both pairs.

Before giving them the gift I told them that I had considered giving them some crystals, because I am so fond of them, but since they don't like minerals I got them something organic instead. Anahi asked "what, did you get us food?", but when she opened the box she squealed in delight about loving the colour, and they both loved the joke. Lucia though her ear rings were nice enough, but she wasn't as enthusiastic as Anahi was, which was no surprise, but there hadn't been time to go looking in more stores in hopes of finding something better.

But now it is after midnight (oops!), and I need to do my yoga and get some sleep so that I can be at work at 08:00 tomorrow, so I will have to describe the trip home and the loot I brought back on another occasion (if I remember).
kareina: (me)
The last time I had a chance to post was three days ago, so it is time to try to catch up. Mom is still with us. Her spirt is strong and she has been smiling and laughing, every day. However, the heart attack she had on Friday after Thanksgiving was her fifth trip to ER for heart issues since March. This one presented a bit differently than the others, since the first symptom she noticed was shortness of breath, so they went to the ER, where she was diagnosed with fluid in her lungs which was “probably related to heart issues”. Further investigating discovered that the stent, which had been cleared out last time she was in, was blocked again, so they cleaned it out again, put in a new stent, and a balloon pump to help the heart beat at full strength (though I am not clear if that was all in one go or during different procedures, as that was all done before I got to Seattle).

When the dust settled from that mom announced that she is done with the ER and all of the unpleasant things that happen when they are trying to save your life. She requested that she need never again face breathing tubes, chest compressions, electric shocks, etc. That decision was a major factor in our decision to gather. My sister Amber was the first to arrive; she flew in from Toronto, where she and her husband had been spending Thanksgiving with her husband's family. My aunt Barbara flew in from Alaska (arriving Monday evening), I flew in from Sweden (arriving late Tuesday evening, so they didn’t bring me to the hospital till Wednesday morning), my sister Kirsty flew in from Australia (arriving Wednesday during the day, so she went directly to the hospital).

(Note: this is the first time we sisters have all been together since 2010, and the first time we were all in the same place as Aunt Barbara since Amber’s wedding, many years before that).

News of our impending arrival really perked mom up and she started doing a bit better. We each came in about half a day apart, and each arrival brought her (and all of us) much joy. The docs had tried twice (once on Monday, once on Tuesday, both before my arrival) to wean her from the balloon pump, by decreasing the interval at which it pumps, dropping from 1 pump for every heart pump to 1:2, and then 1:3, but neither attempt went well, and they needed to bring it back to a 1:1 rhythm to stop the AFibs (it turns out that mom is one of those people who really don’t handle AFib well at all).

After we arrived, and she was doing better, they tried switching her meds to one(s?) which might make her heart strong enough to beat on its own, and they did another test weaning during the night between Wednesday and Thursday. This time they were able to reduce the balloon pump frequency all the way to 1:3 without causing problems, so they put it back to full strength and scheduled the removal for 16:00 on in conjunction with the room party we girls had planned.

One of the things that led to the “let’s have a party” idea was that Amber had gone shopping while in Toronto and picked up two new party dresses, one of which is a full length evening gown. Since she didn’t go home before flying here, she had them with her, so we had to give her a reason to wear them. But that meant that the rest of us needed to dress up, too. Therefore, on Wednesday evening while I did a slumber party with mom in her room (Beth and Amber had each done so the two nights previously) the rest of them looked through the closets at Beth’s house till everyone (including Beth’s two lovely daughters, Anahi and Lucia) found appropriate party clothes. Then Thursday during the day, while Aunt Barbara and mom hung out together, we sisters went to a second hand store to find me a party dress. They love to shop, so they wen through the racks and found a ton of dresses for me to try on, which I did, even the ones made from synthetic fabric, so that they could take photos. (one of the dresses was a 1920’s style flapper dress totally covered with sequins over a very, very synthetic base fabric which was kinda cute, but would have been horrid to wear for any length of time). Eventually we narrowed the choices down to two options, and, since Amber had two party dresses, we decided to get both, and she and I would both do a costume change later in the evening.

Then hit a grocery store for party snacks (while Beth went to a nearby shop for decorations) and we ran home, packed jewellery for everyone, and returned to the room. We got the room decorated and everyone into their party clothes (we bought mom a tiara and a feather boa, and one of the nurses gave her a pretty patch work quilt, so she was dressed up, too) and took photos of everyone with mom. Then we were shooed out of the room so that they could do the procedure to remove the balloon, and while we were waiting, we took more photos by the Christmas tree in the lobby.

Mom tells us that the procedure didn’t hurt, and she rather enjoyed the time, since it was the good looking young doctor who had to apply pressure on the entry point for the whole 40 minutes, so she passed the time flirting with him and telling him the story of her arranged marriage with Terry.

We had been told in advance of the procedure that if it wasn’t going to go well for her that she could die very soon after the removal, or it could take a few hours. There was also the possibility that she would do well and get to recover, but that one was a real long shot, given how weak her heart was. All of that also added up to a reason for a party—she is the kind of person who deserves a good farewell party, if it goes that way, and a good celebration party if it goes that way. We had told them in advance that we were going to have a party, but I am not certain just how seriously they took us, till they actually saw it. It was a fabulous party, with good food, pretty clothes, little mini top hats, fake moustaches on sticks, amazing singing (Anahi and Lucia are both very active in musical theatre and sound fantastic), lots of laughing, and a few tears. Mom’s rule for us all is “it is ok to be sad, and even to cry, but do it with a smile on your face”.

The party wound down a bit after 22:00, and we tidied up a bit and some of us went back to the house to get sleep, while others decided to wait with her, in case she was going to die they didn’t want her to be alone. I was one of the ones who went home, since I had spent 26 hours traveling, and only gotten like five hours sleep during that time, so I was still a bit behind on sleep. Before I left, I told mom that in the morning I would bake some reiska (her favourite bread), and if she was still here when I got back she could have some. After I was back at the house, I set a bread sponge, did my yoga and went to sleep at about 20 minutes before midnight.

That night mom asked to have her various tubes, IVs, etc. to come out just after midnight, so they called the house to see if anyone wanted to come back in to be with her. Beto (Beth’s husband) woke me just after 01:00 to let me know of her decision, and to see if I wanted to go back. I woke up thinking “I have to bake reiska”, but when I understood that I had only been sleeping for an hour and that Beto was going to drive people in straight away I decided to keep sleeping (which is to say I was really too tired to get up).

So he left and I snuggled down into my pillows again, and I heard mom’s voice say “get some sleep kiddo”. However, I didn’t fall back asleep, and after some minutes of laying there I woke up enough to get up and go do that baking. They didn’t have any real butter in the fridge (there was a butter-oil blend, but I am a purist), but there was a package of whipping cream that hadn’t been used at Thanksgiving, so I whipped that into butter and put the butter milk into the big loaf. I also made a smaller vegan loaf of reiska for Amber, since she eats only vegan food these days. (This is the first time I have ever made it with olive oil instead of butter, and she said it was good.)

When the bread was done (around 03:30) Beto drove back to the house to pick me up (good thing the hospital is less than three miles from the house, with all of the running back and forth that has been happening). I brought in the bread, fresh butter, some raspberry jam (the one vegan bread topping I saw in my quick look in the fridge) and a box of fresh raspberries they had). Those who were still awake were glad to have the hot bread, and the others we glad to have it when they woke up. Mom was sleeping then but seemed to smile when the bread smell reached her, and I think she appreciated it.

Some time after she woke up on Friday morning, she asked for reiska and coffee to dunk it in (her favourite way to eat it), and it made me very happy (and a bit weepy) to be able to give it to her (not that she ate much).

She tells us that she loved the party we gave her and assured us all that she has had a good life and is ready to go. However, as Friday progressed, she continued to do ok. Her heart beats weakly, and sometimes irregularly, but it is still beating, and her spirit and sense of humour remains strong. She slept a lot and, when awake would tell us that she just wanted another 10 minute nap, so, of course, we encouraged her to take one. By around 14:30 I was much too tired to stay awake, so when one of the sisters suggested that perhaps it was time to switch to doing shifts instead of everyone staying in the room all the time, I gratefully went back to the house, did a quick yoga session, explicitly told them that they shouldn’t wake me, even if there is news or a change in situation, and went to sleep at 15:30, and slept for nine hours.

When I woke, I promptly sent a message to the Sister’s channel in messenger to let them know I was up if whomever was on duty wanted to come home, and Beth sent Beto home to pick me up and bring me in, and then she and Lucia went home with him. I had brought my computer with me, but foolishly forgot the international power converter that Beth had lent me at the house, along with the power strip it was plugged into (I had used it to charge my phone and Bluetooth adapter overnight), so I couldn’t use it (I had used it often enough while flying that I don’t think there was enough battery left to be worth trying to bother with it. So, I amused myself doing yoga, dancing (we are playing music mom enjoys via pandora all the time, and every so often she requests a new artist/channel), reading, and playing with my phone.

(I have never been a computer game person, and have never had any games on my phone at all, but Beth showed me one she plays that involves filling in cross word patterns from a set of only a very few letters (rather than from clues), and this struck me as something that would be a great way to get better at Swedish spelling and to fill in gaps in my vocabulary, so I went looking for one. The one I found is similar enough to the one Beth plays, and I am finding the game itself to be useful, as I try to think what other words I can make from those four or five letters, and as I look up the meanings of those words I don’t know yet, I find the “game” aspect of it to be very, very annoying. Sadly, I can’t find anything in the settings to turn off all of the fireworks and notifications of how many points I am accumulating, etc. I tried emailing them to ask how to turn it off, but who knows if they will ever reply. However, I just now asked on FB if anyone can recommend one which is just the puzzle, an no annoying fireworks, interruptions for praise, or announcements of the accumulation of points, so perhaps someone will know of something.)

Around 07:00 on Saturday Amber and Kirsty got up and decided to swing by a store on the way to the hospital and asked if I wanted anything. I ordered the power adapter and asked them to pick up a new power strip from the store so that we could take it to the hospital without needing to unplug anything at the house (it wasn’t worth waking Beth to see if they already have a spare, an extra spare power strip is always useful). Of course, when they arrived with the power adapter and power strip, I now had company, so didn’t bother to get the computer out. Mom woke up after they got there and was surprised to still be in the hospital room, she had been dreaming of being at a beautiful crypt with a line of people coming by to touch it in farewell.

Mom took another nap, and Amber and I left Kirsty with mom and we went on a quest for a guest air mattress for the house. By the time we returned (with the mattress) both Beth and Aunt Barbara had arrived, and a bit later mom’s cousin Bonnie and her daughter Sharon dropped by for a short visit.

During the day we girls spoke to one of the cardiologists, who let us know that mom is now stable enough that she no longer needs the ICU, but that since she has chosen end-of-life “comfort care” (no life-prolonging meds or drastic measures, but only meds designed to make certain that the time she has left is comfortable) they can transfer her to hospice care. We had the choice between hospice in this hospital, which is so close to Beth’s house, and another quite a bit further away, so, of course, we choose the close one. However, given that it is a weekend, we have no idea how long it will take to get a room for her and do the transfer, so in the meantime we continued to decorate her current room, adding Christmas lights and more drawing on the window with the special metallic window markers we had bought for the party.

I had been up since just after 01:00 on Saturday, so when my friend Josie (who lives in the Seattle area) came by at 15:30 I had her take me back to the house, where we visited till it was time for her to head off to her evening activity, and then I went straight to bed just before 18:00 (very happy that I had done yoga already that day). I woke briefly when Beth came in some time later to (I thought at the time open the box with the new air mattress) get something from the printer (I am sleeping in the downstairs living room) but went right to sleep thereafter and never heard the girls bring in the new, huge, very tall air mattress. Thus, I woke up just after midnight to see Kirsty getting settled for the night in her huge princess bed, which made my little futon on the floor nest look like something for Cinderella. (Note: even so, I like my floor bed better—I have a suitcase for a headboard, and my pillows won’t fall off the edge of the bed in the night. If I were on the huge air mattress my pillows would fall, and I would be sad.)

When I went upstairs Amber and her husband Dave were there—he had just arrived from San Francisco, so after a short visit with them they brought me to the hospital so that Beth could go home and get some sleep. Now I am happily curled up in the corner with my computer, which means that I have had a chance to type this all up before I forget. Wish it was better news. We don’t know how much longer mom will be with us, but she knows she is loved, and she is content that she has had a good life, and she encourages us all to keep on smiling.

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kareina

May 2025

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